Indiana Disability Awareness Month

Indiana Disability Awareness Month

March is fast approaching. There is a lot to look forward to: warmer weather (fingers crossed), St. Patrick’s Day parades and parties,  and the  March Madness NCAA basketball tournament. But there is one more reason to be excited for the third month of the year. March is Disability Awareness Month!

Each March, the Indiana Governor’s Council for People with Disabilities sponsors Disability Awareness Month to promote the full inclusion of people with disabilities in all aspects of our communities. The Council wants you to get involved!  You can bring Disability Awareness Month to your community by ordering free campaign materials and conducting a disability awareness event or activity in your school, church, workplace or other group, or for the whole community!

Your campaign materials kit will include:

  • A CD with information packets and theme-specific campaign materials (You may also visit IndianaDisabilityAwareness.org and click on “Campaign Materials” to view and download all 20 information packets.)
  • 100 stickers and 100 bookmarks
  • 2 posters
  • Awareness Activities booklet
  • 25 Power of Words brochures
  • Coordinator and participant evaluation forms

The INDATA Project at Easter Seals Crossroads is dedicated to helping individuals with disabilities and we encourage and try to facilitate the spread of awareness and advocacy throughout the  community. We hope that you are able to help your community get involved in Disability Awareness Month 2011!

If you have questions or need assistance, please contact Chad Crowe at ccrowe@gpcpd.org or (317) 232-7775 (voice).

For more information and to order your kit visit the Indiana Disability Awareness website!

Drink Aide on Wheelchair

Drink-Aide on Wheelchair

Mealtime Partners Inc. is an organization that aims to provide individuals with a physical disability the opportunity to eat and drink independently. Mealtime Partners offers a broad range of drinking systems, some of which provide hands free drinking and can be mounted to a wheelchair or bed. Others address the special swallowing needs of our clients including drinking thickened liquids or needing a controlled amount of liquid for each swallow. In their January 2011 Independent Eating and Drinking Newsletter, Mealtime Partners addresses the widespread issue of dehydration, which is a common ailment of individuals who lack the physical ability to adequately feed and hydrate themselves. The following is an excerpt from the January newsletter.

The High Cost of Dehydration

Medical treatment for rehydration is estimated to have exceeded $1 billion in the U.S. in 1999 for elderly patients, alone. If these costs are projected to 2010 it is an enormous medical expense that could be significantly reduced with preventative treatment.

Because medical costs are skyrocketing there is a movement towards providing preventative medical treatment to reduce overall medical cost in the United States. Many health conditions, if treated appropriately on a regular basis, can be managed without hospitalization or the need for emergency treatment, but if neglected can become life threatening. Some examples of these are diabetes, high blood pressure, and some heart conditions. However, something as simple as adequate hydration is often overlooked as a significant health issue that is essential for ongoing good health. When hydration is neglected and someone becomes dehydrated, many negative health issues can occur.

Dehydration is an ongoing problem for many people, especially those with disabilities. It is responsible for health problems such as urinary tract infections, kidney problems, skin tissue deterioration, and headaches. All of these conditions require medical treatment that, in some cases, can be protracted, require hospitalization, and thus be very expensive.

In most cases, dehydration is preventable! However, it takes a vigilant caregiver to offer a drink on a regular schedule to keep someone adequately hydrated. This is a difficult task when someone is undertaking many care-giving responsibilities. Often, what happens is the person is offered a large drink, infrequently. This introduces an element of risk to the health of the person. When drinking a large quantity of liquid at a time, the person drinking takes a sizeable volume of liquid into their mouth at one time, and swallows repeatedly to clear all of the liquid from their mouth. With each swallow, within the sequence of swallows, the risk of choking or aspiration increases. Therefore, because of the added risk, this is a poor method of avoiding dehydration.

For most people a drinking system can be made available to them even if they are unable to hold or lift a cup. However, regardless of this easy solution to avoiding dehydration, Medicare, Medicaid and private health care insurance providers consider all drinking systems as “aids for daily living” and do not cover their cost. However, they do cover the cost of an emergency room visit and/or hospital stay that was brought about by dehydration. According to the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ), about one in  ten of the nearly 40 million hospitalizations in 2008 were potentially avoidable. Dehydration was among the conditions for which hospitalization was avoidable with the appropriate outpatient care.

Additionally, according to the National Pressure Ulcer Long-Term Care Study (NPULS), dehydration was associated with a 42% increase in risk of developing pressure ulcers in nursing home residents. The estimated annual cost for treating pressure, or decubidus, ulcers in the United States is $1.3 billion.

Would it not be wiser for Medicare, Medicaid and private insurance providers to fund drinking systems for those clients who are unable to drink independently? It certainly appears to be one inexpensive approach for reducing overall medical expenses in the United States.

For more information on Mealtime Partners drinking systems, click here or call 800-996-8607

To receive the Mealtime Partners monthly newsletter, click here!

iDress for Weather Application

iDress for Weather Application

iDress for Weather is the first ever assistive technology weather application available to enrich the lives of persons with disabilities.  iDress for Weather supports people whose cognitive processing or memory is affected by a disability, or has changed due to injury or illness.  iDress for Weather can be a tool to learn or relearn the connections between weather and clothing.

iDress for Weather is an application that allows you to see clothing and accessories that correspond to the day’s weather.

Features of iDress for Weather includes:

  • GPS or zip code entry for on the spot local weather conditions
  • Fahrenheit and Celsius settings
  • Ability to set own temperature ranges based on personal definitions of temperature
  • Current and accurate weather conditions provided by WeatherBug.com

A Group of People Jumping

A Group of People Jumping

You’re Invited!

What: An Advocate Learning Event

When: Saturday, September 11, 2010 from 9:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m.

Where: Radisson Hotel at the Indianapolis Airport, Indianapolis, Indiana

If you’re a human service professional, parent or guardian, and serve as an advocate or support staff for an individual with developmental disabilities, you’ll enjoy this inspiring and informative presentation by nationally recognized authority, trainer, clinician, and consultant Dr. Tom Pomeranz. Take this opportunity to learn how to enhance your personal power, learn best practice strategies, and increase your effectiveness through leadership.

  • FREE for parents and guardians
  • $30 Registration fee to human service providers (CEU’s will be provided)
  • Includes a continental breakfast, lunch, exhibits
  • Sponsorship packages that include exhibit space are available.

RSVP by September 1st to reserve your spot in the event.  Call Pierre Jackson at (219)663-3177 or send an email to pjackson@spectrumindiana.com

Indiana's Flag

Indiana's Flag

The Indiana Governor’s Council for People with Disabilities is preparing Indiana’s State Disability Plan for 2012-2016. The completed plan will be used to guide the work of the Council, including its training and dissemination activities, the events it sponsors, and the projects it funds.

Participate in the process- the council is hosting town meetings in eight area locations in the state.  The purpose of the meetings is to gather ideas from persons with disabilities and family members about the priorities that should be addressed in the upcoming State Disability Plan.

The first of these Town Meetings will be held for Indianapolis and the surrounding areas:

Date & Time: Monday, August 30
6:30 – 8:30
Location: American Red Cross
441 E. 10th St., Indianapolis, IN 46202
Room: Governor’s Hall

The Council asks that people with disabilities and family members sign up and register for this Town Meeting by going to this website: www.cwlab.org

Times and places of other Town Meetings be announced in early September. They will be held in these areas:

  • 9/20     Fort Wayne
  • 9/30     Terre Haute
  • 10/18   Evansville
  • 10/25   Merrillville
  • 10/26   South Bend
  • 11/8     Richmond
  • 11/15   Clarksville

To register for any of these town meetings, click here.

Balloons

Balloons

What: 20th Anniversary of the ADA

When: Monday, July 26, 2010 at 10:30 a.m.

Where: Indianapolis Artsgarden

Why: ADA-Indiana and the Indiana Governor’s Council for People with Disabilities are hosting the State Celebration for the 20th Anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Act. Hoosiers from all over the State will gather in Indianapolis to join in the Celebration of the 20th Anniversary of the ADA. There will be music, dancing, and refreshments.

Plan to be there Monday, July 26th for the Big Celebration Party!

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